How I Plot My Books (My Process Is Fiendishly Dangerous Yet…Fabulous)

With NaNoWriMo fast approaching I have been plotting like a dragonish fiend. I’m a wholehearted plotter, peoples. I used to be a panster (a word here which means “writing-whatever-comes-with-no-direction-or-previous-planning”) but it absolutely stressed me out. I didn’t know what I was doing! Where I was going! WHAT EVEN THE POINT OF MY BOOK WAS. I wrote an entire book without a point because…pantsing. Sometimes I pet that novel and smile at it fondly. But mostly I toss it on the metaphorical bonfire and burn it with the fire of a thousand disappointed suns and then scream like I’ve been impaled by a pineapple frond.

I learnt that I like to plot, okay? It is my thing.

SO HOW DO YOU PLOT, CAIT? WHAT ARE YOUR PLOTTING SECRETS?

This is an excellent question which I plan to answer. Furthermore, before you even start to read about my plotting process, I can give you the excellent news that — MY PROCESS IS DERANGED. I follow no methods. I download no printable outline sheets. Half of the reasons I do something is “because it looks pretty”. But you asked (actually you didn’t, but I know you wanted to ask…see how helpful I am?) and I am answering.

TO BEGIN, I PLUCK ONE OF MY 9,083 BOOK IDEAS AND WRESTLE IT ONTO THE EXECUTIONER’S TABLE.

I used to pick any idea that tickled my fancy. Now I am agented, I try to be a little more responsible and discuss and refine ideas with my agent. I’m a good moppet like that. Once I have a conglomeration of approved ideas, I then pick the shiniest one.

Aaaaand it also depends on the time of the year. At the beginning of the year I’m 2948% more likely to write something happy and smushy. July saw me writing a contemporary where exactly no one died. October had me killing off several key members and bringing them back as zombies. November … well, everyone will die. Sorry.

(AND A BRIEF DEVIATION TO ASK WHERE THE IDEAS COME FROM?)

From anywhere. I know that’s a horrible answer BUT IT’S TRUE. I get many “what if” ideas from books I read or movies I watch. They never relate. For instance, when I saw The Eagle, I went off and wrote a sci-fi book that had no similarities in plot whatsoever…but. Somehow it happened??

I also get ideas from realising I want to read a certain kind of book and then can’t find one already written. So I write it. I am helpful for me, at least.

SINCE IT’S NOVEMBER, I FEEL LIKE WRITING SOMETHING VICIOUS. SO DRAGONS IT IS. I BEGIN TO READ DRAGON BOOKS.

I almost always descend on the library with sharp teeth for “research” sessions. I hate research. So the best way to do it is by reading everyone else’s YA books. (I’ll start reading books on my topic months before I intend to write, too.)

NEXT I LIST A BILLION RANDOM THINGS I LIKE AND DECIDE HOW THEY FIT TOGETHER.

Usually they don’t fit together. Which is disagreeable. BUT THAT DOESN’T STOP ME. I am queen of all here. These ideas will obey.

This year I wanted dragons, and roadtrips, murder, and unreliable narrator, sushi, compulsive lying, epilepsy, dubious governments, and everything frozen (and if you dare sing Let it Go I will wrap you in a pancake and feed you to my dragons).

Does this even count as “inspiration”?? My process of writing is like 30% inspiration and 70% things that interest me in that moment.

I TRA LA LA AROUND LIKE A HOMELESS PENGUIN AND IMAGINE SCENES.

This usually happens when I take my dog for a walk. Showers are also good for imaging. Also those hours when one is supposed to be sleeping. But PFFFT. You can sleep when you’re dead.

I GET TITLES AND NAMES BECAUSE THEY ARE IMPORTANT TO ME.

Titles technically don’t matter that much now…buuuut. I LIKE THEM. I also pick character names. This 100% depends on what names I’ve recently stumbled across and liked. I almost always have gender neutral names because it amuses me to have characters named Valentin and August and have no one know who is who. Mwahha haha ha.

For this book I was DYING about the names! I couldn’t think of any I liked! I ended up using “Ruby” as a placeholder name and…it stuck. I also spent 2 months calling my main character Kinshi, but then changed it to Matsumoto Mo and felt much better.

ONCE I HAVE THOSE SQUISHY SCENES IN MY HEAD — I WRITE A SYNOPSIS.

I read, somewhere who knows where, that if you write a synopsis BEFORE you write a book, it’s so. much. easier. I AGREE. It’s a lifesaver. Plus when I need to bounce ideas off my agent it’s better to have a flexible synopsis instead of a stammering email of “Sooooo. I like dragons and I want them to eat people and probably they cough up icicles instead of fire?”

I usually write 2,000-3,000 words! I outline scenes and basically have an outline of events. I definitely make sure I have a beginning and an ending. I make sure I have a VERY detailed middle because middles are easy to lose interest and decide to abandon authorhood and take up professional penguin training.

If I get stuck? If the plot just isn’t coming? If I despair the plotting will ever come together? I JUST SIT DOWN AND WRITE OUT THAT SYNOPSIS. I can sacrifice every single step — but I must have that synopsis.

I SCRIVENER EVERYTHING.

This is new! I only just got Scrivener and…oh my gosh, humans. If you are an organisational freak like me — GET YOURSELF SCRIVENER. It’s glorious.

Usually I’d dump everything onto a word doc, but now I can have little folders and folders inside folders inside folders. And excuse me, this is so beautiful to even type I need a moment to cry in happiness.

This is when I:

Write character profiles: I’ll write out their names, their goals, their failings, their food obsessions. All that squishy stuff. Sometimes I find their MTBI personality and I’ll go onto pinterest and see how an ISTJ functions. I’ll write down their habits according to that too, because IT IS SO HELPFUL. Characters are my failing.

Do a little world-building: I don’t get too detailed, because first drafts are for exploring my own world. But I write about the culture, the currency, the important details about food. If I have magic, I make rules.

I research the Weird Thing I’m obsessed with: like for this book I’m interested in Japan. So I take a tour on Youtube of a day in the life of someone in Japan. I google pictures of Japanese food. I get very hungry.

I DO ALSO WRITE JOKES TO MYSELF, BECAUSE I’M HILARIOUS LIKE THAT.

There is nothing like amusing oneself with jokes, okay? I am a highly funny individual and myself appreciates that.

I ALSO USE MY WALL AS A VISUAL STORYBOARD BECAUSE THAT’S WHAT WALLS WERE INVENTED FOR.

Some people hang paintings. I hang lists of characters I’m considering killing. (Oops?) I love putting my outline on the wall because I have a HORRENDOUS memory. And this really helps me to remember where my story is going. I stand and stare at it and think of ceiling wax and dragon wings and it works for me so well. I’ll pin up quotes and character outlines and extra scenes I’ve made up. I turn it into a spider web Sherlock would be proud of.

I PINTEREST AND NO SHAME, FOLKS.

Pinterestcan be a black hole of procrastination…it can also be hugely helpful if you’re a visual person. Also if you have face-blindness, like me, and can’t think of what your characters look like (bad for description!) it’s monstrously stupendous to find faces.

MY HAPPINESS WHEN I FIND A FACE.

THEN I PROCRASTINATE AND WAIT FOR AN AUSPICIOUS DAY TO START WRITING. THEN I WRITE WITHOUT BREATHING FOR 7 TO 10 DAYS.

Because…writing is hard okay?! I have to psych myself up! I’m terrible and usually go “I’ll start on Monday” and if I miss that Monday — I DON’T START ON TUESDAY, BECAUSE NO. I WAIT FOR THE NEXT MONDAY. It’s bad, I tell you. But once I start, I write 8,000+ words a day. I usually write fast for a 7 to 10 days and don’t read or blog avidly. Everyone in the house forgets my name. My dog is forced to fry pancakes and bake lemon pudding for himself to survive.

And then I emerge, exhausted and with numb fingers, and announce I wrote a glorious book that is so deathly hilarious and…I hate it. Like a good artist.

-~-

There we have it! ALL MY SECRETS! My methods mostly depend on me having a) a very good imagination, and b) a very clear idea of where I want the story to go. I usually know when a book is ready to move to from imagining scenes to the synopsis stage. But it can be a few weeks…or over a year. I do almost everything by feel! Does it FEEL like a good time to write this book? Do I have enough concrete scenes? How many times can I get away with writing about assassins in one year?? All these questions are asked. Sometimes they’re answered.

And then — I have a book.

what’s your plotting process right?! are you a panster or plotter? what’s the most CRUCIAL part of your process??? do you do anything similar to me? LET US TALK ABOUT OUR METHODS IN THE COMMENTS!!

Comments

I’m a plotter. I like to plot- somewhat. but I also like to see where things take me. I really like writing character arcs/ and backgrounds, whcih helps me a lot. I also struggle with where to put new chapters so I *try* to do that in the plotting process. Yes to the synopsis as well. Thanks for sharing your process and good luck for nano!

I’m somewhere between plotter and pantser. I don’t plot in detail because it’s like being told what to do. But I still plan a few chapters ahead so I know where I’m going and I know the ending before I start writing.

I don’t know if I have a real process. For my Fantasy book, it’s an idea that started almost ten years ago now. And it has changed so much since then! My very first version of Eternal Light was called The Fire Crystal and it was a wopping 40 pages in Word. Jep. But the essentials remained. The MC goes to a whole new world he never knew existed and elemental powers & dragons. Over the years I just got idea’s and wrote them down. Now that I have the real story, Eternal Light, I usually get idea’s or solutions to problems randomly and most of the time I get those right before I go to sleep. I don’t know, my brain works overtime when I lie in bed waiting for sleep to come.

For my contemporary book, I just took a bunch of stuff from my own past and threw it in a blender. Then I added new stuff & changed some details and I mixed it up. Then I was listening to a song and that inspired me to change the POV. So pretty simple.

For my third project, which is a paranormal story about revenge (it’s really dark), I got inspiration from a song. The lyrics spoke to me and I worked out a rough storyline from there.

This is such a great, and well-needed topic, I love it! 🙂 I’ve never been a plotter, or a panster for that matters, I’ve just been going with the wind, haha, sometimes writing out stuff beforehand, and sometimes letting my words take me and see where that goes. I need to get better at character shaping, though. I’ve downloaded a PDF version of some sort of character questionnaire, and it’s really good I think, but I don’t know how that will work out, I guess I’ll see 🙂 AND SCRIVENER, I’ve downloaded the 30 days free trial for now, and I’m still trying to figure out how that works. I feel like it’s gonna be helpful A LOT when it comes to plannning, and even more for editing, if I’m going that far, haha! 🙂

Your plotting process looks MUCH more complicated than mine. Normally, the plotting process begins when an idea assaults me enough that I start thinking about it ALL. THE. TIME. I begin noting down ideas in a document I call draft 0, and this normally takes a couple of months. Then I pick an auspicious date, much like you, and I used to do wall-planning but now I go for the more environmentally friendly option of powerpoint-planning. Pinterest is super important. I’m way less detailed than you, though, at least on paper, because it’s mostly in my head?

I did have to plan a magic system, though, and I did it in a classic word doc like your printed stuff, and I even filmed myself doing it in my latest post. I’M SO EXCITED FOR NANO EEEEEP.

You got Scrivener? I love it so much! I do my first draft in word so I can keep track of my word count easier than do all my editing in Scivener, plus all the character and setting stuff.

But, unlike you, I cannot plot a book to save my life. I end up veering off the outline because my characters and plots like to do their own thing and the outline is basically ignored. I wish I could outline; it would make writing that much easier. BUT I JUST CAN’t.

Plotter all the way. I pantsed (totally a word) NaNoWriMo last year and it was the biggest mistake of my life. At 25,000 words I was literally inventing problems to stretch it out because I had a start point, and characters, and a world, but nowhere to go. I think they changed their minds about where they were going about six billion times and every time they had to re-cross the world.
*Bangs head against wall*
Right now I have my alpha plot and beta plot stuck up on my wardrobe doors. It’s the first time I’ve ever done it like that. 😉 I downloaded the Scrivener trial and instantly hated it because I am a creature of habit and word is my spiritual home. I use the headings to keep track of where things are (right now I have plot synopsis, places, characters, and magic all in one word doc. It is glorious. 🙂

So, apart from books, dragons, vague plans to erect a Stiefvater shrine, and non-movie-watching, we also have PLANNING in common! I’m not surprised. We’ve already agreed on Scrivener on Twitter. (Honestly, though, HOW FANTABULOUS IS THIS MAGICAL SOFTWARE OF HEAVENLY ORGANIZATION?) I won Scrivener (!) last October, from a kind soul who was willing to give a few copies away, and OH, HOW WELL LAST NANO-PLANNING WENT! (The actual story, well… But the planning was awesome!)

I’m sort of an incredible mixture of plotter and panster but I’m trying my best to shift my full focus to the former. It’s hard. But I’m trying. I love writing character acrs as well and thank you for the glorious amounts of tips, specially the synopsis thingy, I’m definitely going to use this process from now onwards.

This is actually pretty awesome! And your novel sounds great! I really like your planning process. Why is the synopsis so important? Also your Sherlock gifs were on point. Research sounds hard. What’s the most interesting thing you learned? Which was the most boring research book?
Are you done plotting?
When do you start writing?

Dragons!!! High five. I’m writing dragons too. Thanks for your insight – I’ve always been a pantser but I’ve learnt over the past year that writing a fantasy as a pantser is not a good idea. But I hate plotting – I’ve written out a summary (sort of) of what I want to happen, I know all the major players (but haven’t done a full character bio for them), and kind written out important scenes, but that’s about it.

I do find pinterest useful though, and I have specific pins that go with specific scenes so I’m hoping to use those to “get the juices flowing”.

Love the Sherlock gifs. Congrats on getting an agent! 🙂 I tried Scrivener, but I didn’t know how to work it! Now all I use are Google Docs and Evernote. I’m gonna do that writing a synopsis thing because I tried and I tried but I get no satisfaction! LOL, I’m limping my way through a crime fic, and I still don’t know what to do for NaNo 🙁

I was sort of scared of Scrivener, but it really isn’t TOO bad if one is willing to just click on all the things and see what they do. xD Ohh, I’ve heard of Evernote but never looked it up. I SHALL DO THAT.

So, what exactly is NANOWRIMO because it sounds quite interesting and I am fully intrigued after reading your post…even though it wasn’t technically about that.

Your plotting is perfect and I wish that I was organized like you. I would be all over the place and wouldn’t know what to do. I would be so overwhelmed so now I will be using some of your ideas to help me…if I do decide to possibly start writing. I can’t wait to see even more of your books because every idea you come up with, Cait, is marvelous.

AHH THIS IS SUCH A LATE REPLY, I’M SO SORRY, ERICA. *hangs head in shame* ANyway, NaNoWriMo is short for National Novel Writing Month. Basically it’s just a challenge to write 50,000-words in 30 days! 😀 People all over the world participate and it’s really awesome. *nods*

I’m a planster. I plan, extensively, but I never write anything down until I actually write the book, so I can keep a loose hand on my plot and let it surprise me. Life is dull if your writing can’t surprise you.

Um, like you, most of my ideas come from “what if” questions, or the realization of “Why has no one written a story like this. Oh, wait. I’m an author. Let me proceed.” And like you, my collection of ideas that I string together usually have no business being together. But I make them work. Also, I find character names and titles to be of the utmost importance. I can’t write a book unless it has a proper title. I’m incapable of it.

But I’d say the most crucial points in my plotting process are determining the key points of the story: The beginning, climax/ending, and any mid-goals. mid-goals are what I call mini-climaxes that I hit in the middle of the book. Some of my longer books may have more than one. Anyway, I need this islands so I can know what I’m working from, and working towards.

Ohh, you must have a good memory then. xD I can think up an epic scene and then 2 days later it’s totally gone unless I write down the basic jist of it. -_- I’m never bored and I have everything plotted out. 😛 Hehe. I think it’s important for a writer just to do what works best for them, right?!? *nods* I’m glad I tried pansting, but I’m also glad I discovered I like plotting waaaay better.

Sounds like you have a great plan! I’m actually a panster who tries to be more of planner, but I usually fail. I’ll have to try some of the things you have here.
Everyone loves Scrivner apparently. I’ve tried it before but it was just too much for me. It didn’t really make sense. 🙁 Oh well.

I think it’s important to do what works best for you, right?!? Like sometimes I feel to lazy to do plotting, but I always regret it. xD SO. I do it. And I kind of love the process of putting a plotting mind-map on my wall. :’) I’M DOING A POST ABOUT SCRIVENER SOON!!

HIGH FIVES FOR WRITING JOKES TO YOURSELF I DO TOO AND MY SANITY IS THUS STILL INTACT XD My sister uses interest allllll the time for plotting and I always be like “DISTRACTION!!!@3!!!” and she be like “NOOO ALL GOOOD THINGGGS” so now she has actually roped me into using it. I will take comfort in the fact that you both are brilliant and have affirmed that it actually can be helpful. XD

I’m a total plotter. I’m all about the color-coded note card synopses and months’ worth of research before I even write my first scene. I write like I vacation: obsessively plan ahead so I can relax when it actually comes time to do it. Then I have enough brain space left to appreciate the little unplanned beautiful things that always seem to pop up. 🙂

I love when writing involves a theme (like in your case dragons, or in my case time travel). Then while plotting and world-building I can be all, “Oh, but I HAVE to watch Back to the Future…because research.”

P.S. My NaNo profile name is Alison W. (super creative, I know) if you want be profile buddies! 🙂

YAYYYY FOR ANOTHER PLOTTER!! *gives you a covert plotter hi five* And isn’t it totally relaxing writing when you know where it’s going?! I feel like I can churn out thousands of words per day because I KNOW what’s coming next and I don’t have to pause for writers block. SO NICE.

YOU’RE SO GOOD AT THIS.
I’m… well, I’m terrible at plotting.
I always have a beginning and an end, but never a middle., and you kind of need that in a book.
I’m so busy that I never have time anymore to sit down and write, butthis has inspired me to try plotting my novels instead of being a pantser

Middles are SCARY. 0_0 I always do intense things in the middles of my books because, as a reader, I usually am bored by that time. 😛 Or just fill the middle of your book with scenes of them eating delicious food. Insta win.

This is a great post! I always love to see how others plan. Personally, I’m a pantser with a very loose outline – kind of like a mix of both. I start my ideas with things/tropes I like (space, pirates, magic, whatever) and then go from there. I also find a lot of my inspiration from random stuff on Pinterest, languages and weird linguistic stuff, and historical events. I really like to think of story lines right before I go to bed so I can write them down and think about it in the morning with a fresh eye. And then I just start writing once I have about eight steps with where to take the story! It takes more revision, but it keeps the blank pages away.

I am a full blown plotter for a full blown plotter (ok, a bit of an exaggeration, but my favorite part of the whole writing process is the plotting part). Usually when I get an idea, I grab the closest piece of paper and start jotting down plot points and possible ways the story could go. Once I’m sure I have a good plot, I break it up into scenes and start to think of setting and stuff, but not that much. I world build as I write, meaning if my protag could use a giant Scottish caterpillar, I give them a giant Scottish caterpillar (who then eats them for breakfast). the very last step, right before I start to write, is naming my characters, who in my current WIP’s I change after the first draft since they don’t sound like they’re from a German based world.

and OMG I IMAGINE SCENES WHILE I SLEEP TOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It is the best! Even if I don’t fall asleep for an extra hour but so what?

This is probably the LEAST deranged you’ll ever be, Cait. My writing method: let the idea stew around in my brain for several months. Then, a week before NaNoWriMo, realise that NANOWRIMO IS COMING UP SOON and then write all of the scenes down. I don’t write a synopsis because ew. I have about 50 scenes and I’ll probably not pay attention to them at all. It’s a fun time.

I LOVE your writing posts 😀 they’re always funny and awesome and it’s nice to see how other people write! I don’t do outlines but before I write my story I usually have a general idea as to where it’s going. When I’m writing I create a powerpoint with all the character’s, their stories, their age…ect. I also include the plot, things I want to include, stuff like that 😀 BUT I LOVE you wall idea, I think that’s so cool!

AFJDKLAS THANK YOU, ANGELINA!! That completely makes my day! *beams and flails like a happy seal* A power point?! That is so cool! I think it’s utterly awesome how most writers have like completely different methods. 😛

Cait, Cait, Cait! I need a publishing house to publish you because I want to read your books … SO BADLY. I am also like amazingly astounded at your awesomeness of plotting and your honesty about the entire thing. Personally, plotting is my favourite time of writing because staring at walls and writing snippets of dialogues and obsessing over character names is pure joy for me. I have no proper process thought (partially because I still consider myself a newbie to this whole writing not as a hobby but seriously thing) but I know I love my imagination and I try to force myself to write outlines because I admit it is easier to write with them. Also I totally relate to writing about random things you love and put together and YAY! for plotting on walls (which I would totally do except my parents have a understandable thing about blu-tac peeling paint off the walls … absolutely understandable, I think, but still …).

I NEED THIS TOO, ANNIE-JO. PLEASE JUST MAKE IT HAPPEN FOR ME, YES?? XD *whispers* My parents had the same thing about blu-tac but they RELENTED YAY. And I do mine on my cupboards to help save walls but, ha, I ran out of cupboards. I think my entire room will need repainting if we move eventually. Agh. But these things must be done for the sake of writing, amirite?! *ahem*
AHHHHH I’M SO GLAD YOU LIKED THIS POST THO. THANK YOU. <3

This is pretty awesome! 😀 I admire your abilities of detailed outlining and then super fast writing.

My process has morphed a lot. I’m slowly becoming something of a plantser. I like having a good idea of what I’m doing but still leaving it loose enough that I can take detours.

Planning my NaNoNovel for this year has been fun. I decided which bunny I wanted to chase then let the ideas come. I started a Microsoft One Note folder for this story and started writing the ideas there. Then I made pages about some specifics (one of those pages is time/dimension travel in media when I asked a friend for book recs). Now I’m kind of just fidgetingly waiting for NaNo to start and making a PInterest board. XD

Ahh, yes!! Letting one’s process morph and change and grow is super good too. *nods* Because, honestly, 2 years ago? I was a complete panster. 0_0 And I wondered why I spent so much time crying and hating my writing. xD I’m a firm believer in trying out ALL THE THINGS so one knows what works best for them.

This is really interesting to read about as someone who isn’t a writer. It’s really eye-opening to see how much work goes into every single book, and how every author has their unique ways of writing a story. Thanks for sharing this wonderful post Cait and, as always, fabulous review! ♥

Hey wow, it’s nice to know somebody else writes jokes to themselves! All the notes I wrote for my stories are full of amusement and just as interesting to read through the second time because of all the insane little useless tidbits I add… typically bitterly comparing my villain with someone from TV I currently hate, or explaining a situation with song lyrics, or just being like “Haha, as if he’s not just as mentally insane as she is” (yes that is an actual thing I have done). I also draw pictures. Sometimes they involve the story, and sometimes they involve… everything but… the story. Eheh.

Oh, Cait, planning. You’re so cute. Let me explain how things work for me.
Step One: Have a (rare, very rare) idea that may not actually be a dead end. Write it down, because otherwise, it will vanish from my mind forever. Spend several days trying to remember what it was and where I wrote it down.
Step Two: Think about the characters. This is easy for me. I love to create characters, apparently. In my head, of course. Only in my head.
Step Three: Realize I have no real plot, other than whatever that first thing to pop into my head was. Where is this story going? No idea. How is it supposed to end? You got me! This is the point where I weep in a corner.
Step Four: Decide to try to write anyway. Spend an hour doing so, feel super proud. Realize I am now behind on everything else and panic.

I don’t know what happens after that, that’s pretty much on repeat so far 😉

BAH. SHANNON. YOU’RE ADORABLE. XD You know it’s okay to take breaks from ALL the things and just focus on one thing for a while, don’t you?! I AM JUST SAYIN’… But zomg, I particularly like step 2. Me. Me exactly. Except me doesn’t even think up the characters. Me just thinks up a personality type and gives it a name and pretends its actually a human. HALP I CAN’T CHARACTER.

Yes, I put my stuff up on my wall, too!!! I call it my Wall of Utter Procrastination because you could look at that thing forever and not get bored. (Not only do I stick up my plots, characters, timelines, etc. but origami, quotes, French verbs, posters, a world map… the list goes on.) Plus my family thinks I’m insane, but whatever. Thanks for sharing your writing process!

Oh, Cait – I so love all of this. I think I need to take your advice here because I tried writing my NaNo book without plotting last year, and it was … just … well … plotless. I LOVE the characters and I think I have a solid idea, but the plot just didn’t go much of anywhere. I’m not giving up on it yet – I’m still planning to wrestle the book into submission, but I realized I needed to do some serious plotting and then give it another go. We shall see!

Ohh, I hope you have a better time with it after plotting! I’m kinda a firm believer that a writer should try both?! Because I wasn’t an intense plotter until this year and my books work out SO much better for it. Less fretting about plotholes too. 😛 So it’s basically my new favourite thing. XD

I don’t know what Scrivener is! I will have to look it up.
Wow you are so organized, it’s awesome. No shame in pintreset, lots of ideas there 😉
But I am happy to see the drive and excitement for this, I hope it works out! good luck 😀

I’m going to do a post on Scrivner now because REASONS. IT IS SO GOOD. *flails* and Pinterest is like a huge part of my process and I honestly don’t know what I’d do without it. 😛
AHHH THANK YOU, LILY!!

Haha. XD We have similarities to our writing process. I’m a plonster (a mix between plotter and panster). I plan out my books roughly before I write them then dive in, though I’m not as speedy as you are. It usually takes me roughly two months to write a draft. And Scrivener is the best. Just sayin’.

I love this post and I love seeing your process. I am so incredibly organized so I LOVE the look of Scrivener. Since this is my first NaNoWriMo and I just decided to do this like two weeks ago, I am just seeing what happens. I am terrified that I will get writer’s block after 5,000 words. I am trying to do a mix of organization and pantsing (just learned that term myself, haha). I want to have a clear idea of where I am starting and where I am ending and plenty of scenes in the middle. But I don’t want to plan every little detail and then feel stuck. I guess I will see how well everything works after this month is over.

Omg, you will adore Scrivener then if you’re an organisation lover. XD IT’s so beautiful. All my files are together neatly and I can have a million folders and afjdklsafd basically Scrivener = everything. I never get writers block when I have detailed outlines now. PERKS. 😀

I love reading these posts in general, but know that I’m ACTUALLY planning to write a book and not just saying it, they’re also really helpful! Plus there are pretty pictures of colorful notes, so that’s a win anyway. I’m a complete pantser, and I basically know nothing about my story before I write it, but that has lead to me getting stuck and demotivated in the past, so I’m trying to find a good middleground now. I can’t plan out everything, because if I already KNOW everything, then where’s the fun in writing it? I’m also terrible with coming up with ANYTHING in advance, so that’s a problem. But I do usually get vague ideas when I actually start writing, and I have a chapter or two for my NaNo novel, so I’m actually trying to do a veryyy vague outline. A day before NaNo starts. I guess I’m definitely still a pantser haha. I never would have a done a synopsis, but since the NaNo site asked for one when I created my novel, I did it, and it’s actually really helpful! I also just downloaded the Scrivener trial version after reading this, because it looks quite handy. Let’s see whether I can figure out how to use it before tomorrow!

YAYYYY I AM SO SO GLAD, VLORA!! 😀 *flails quietly in the background* aHEM. And it’s visually nice to look at when one’s book is plotted across the wall, right? I lie in bed and stare at my cupboard doors of books plots and feel very accomplished. Bad news is I ran out of wlal space. NO MORE WRITING FOR ME.
*plans to take over whole house and cover it in wall plots*
I have to have the detailed outline or else I get stuck and in a flap. XD Knowing what’ll happen lets me write like 10K+ a day easily. hehe

I’m loving it! It’s so useful for referencing other documents without having to open 10.934 windows and it saves everything right away and just ASDKJFLJA IT’S GREAT. I think I’m definitely going to buy it after NaNo, thanks!

Let’s have three cheers for showers and dog-walking! My best ideas always come when I’m getting ready for the day, which usually means I’m running around at 10:30 in a bathrobe with my hair up in a towel and papers flying everywhere.

You are so much more organized than I am. xD I wish I had the patience to set up all of those wall maps, but in reality my notes are all in one file and half of it doesn’t make any sense by the time I go to reference it. But maybe Scrivener can cure me of that . . .

Names and titles, yes! Those are my favorite parts of starting a new story, OMG. I am mildly obsessed with names. I currently have over 300 of them written down to use at some point.

HIP HIP HORAAAAAAY. BAHAH. 10:30 is when your day starts? For shame, Kate. 😉 I start my day at 6:00am and my morning run = 2984298 ideas. 0-0 Sometimes I have to listen to audio books just so I don’t think. hehe

But it depends on what kind of writer you are, right??! Like there’s no point forcing yourself to do a method that doesn’t suit you, right?! I am a details and plotter person. XD IT MADE SCRIVENER MY LIFE.

I don’t really have enough wall space in my room to do the wall-taping thing but I have to admit it’s really tempting to take over the living room over winter break >> That’s when I’m doing my plotting for the current novel I’m working on, and having a large amount of space would be ideal. DO you think taping things to bookshelves would work?

I HAVE NOW RUN OUT OF WALL SPACE. WHAT AM I GOING TO DO BLAISE?!??! I HAVE NO MORE WALLS. *wails* Totally take over the living room. *nods* I’m definitely considering throwing my sister out of her room and taking over her walls. What could go wrong? (I think taping anything anywhere would work! So long as you don’t miss looking at your book?! :P)

This is actually really interesting! I’m still trying to figure out how much plotting works for me. I can’t do pantsing, it stresses me and I get stuck sooo much. But sometimes I get tired of trying to come up with an entire plot and skip sections and then…ooooh it doesn’t go so well. SIGH.

BUT sometimes I’ll be writing along and then something wonderful just happens and I didn’t plan it whatsoever.

I DON’T EVEN KNOW OKAY.

But anyway, I shall now say that Ruby is a great name (in my opinion) and I have an awesome coworked named Mo (but that’s short for Morgan…), so I APPROVE OF YOUR NAMES. *nods*

I TOTALLY GET THIS!! I DO!! Because like I’m still open for surprises in my writing…I don’t shut it down if the characters take off on their own thing. bUT. In case they don’t…I like a mega detailed outline. XD hehe. I skipped like a whole chunk of my NaNo outline because I went off in a different direction so then that didn’t work and WAHHHHH. It was hard but it then turned out okay. xD I THINK. I HOPE. *collapses hoping*

You know, I may just have to try putting those sticky notes on the wall and just staring at them. The visualisation is something I haven’t tried before — mostly because I’m lazy — but it would be very motivational. Maybe because you’re forced to stare at them while they keep reminding you that you still haven’t written a single word.

Doooo iiiiit. I have mine so I can lie in bed and stare at the wall and it’s all pretty and colourful and IT’S LIKE MY BOOK IS ON THE WALL. It’s actually really inspiring. Also makes me feel like Sherlock so #bonus.

Ooh nooo, I am a deep plotter. I usually get the characters first in my mind and have like, a gazillion characters with no novel to stuff them into yet. Then I get the idea, and after that I stuff the characters into the idea (whether they are willing to go or not) and then I see how things go from there xd But for my nano novel this year which is a fantasy (something I have never tried writing before!) the world came first, then the plot and lastly the characters so I am feeling a bit out of depth and lost but I will write it anyway! I love how your novel ideas and writing changes entirely as the months go by 😀

AHHH I ENVY YOUR CHARACTERS THEN. XD I almost always have this great plot and world and it’s like…”okay. Characters. Who can I steal from a different book?” XD I think I wrote one character twice in two books this year. Oops. 0_0 Edits here we come…*sigh* OMG WRITING FANTASY IS SO SO FUN!!! Fantasy is like my everything, so I hope you have fun trying it out! 😀

You make me want to write again! The process feels so hard when there’s so much in your head and you just don’t know how to translate it all to paper. For the one novel I’m writing, I have, like, three timelines, a notebook, and a ton of scraps of paper dedicated to “organization.” Maybe the next book I’ll write from beginning to end instead of writing what I feel like. But maybe I should finish this one even if I don’t plan to use it! Maybe even if it’s not good enough to want to publish, I can look back fondly at my first completed attempt. But I’m blathering now- literally typing these thoughts as they come to me. Haha, I’m tired. Bedtime! Thanks, Cait!

Omg, that is GOOD NEWS THEN. 😀 It is hard though!! But I think it gets easier once you learn more about yourself as a writer? Like for me, my July-contemporary was like buuuurning my eyeballs out. But then this dragon book was like — BOOM — everything is there just write. XD I plotted them the same way but sometimes some stories are just harder. *nods* Finishing things is uber important though. Because you can’t really edit/polish until you have things finished. 😉

As always, Cait, your writing skills are flabbergasting and entertaining! YOU DO SO MANY DETAILS! I like that you do so many details, but I never do details when I plot because if I write all the details my brain thinks it has already written a book and then it refuses to write any actual drafts. You can imagine many awesome ideas have faced a tragic end because of this. 🙁 Also I have to say I like all the colors and spacial elements you use so that you are touching your story on paper before you type it all up on the computer. That, I think, is super cool.

AFJDKSLAFDS REALLY??!?! THANK YOU HEATHER. <3 And yuuuus details. dETAILS ARE EVERYTHING BASICALLY. I never considered how into details I was until I was writing up this post and like, yes. Lots of details here. o.O And I totally get that when you plot your brain things you wrote it. xD I was writing out a list of books I'd written and I was SURE I'd forgotten one. Turns out I thought I wrote a book I hadn't. *facepalm*

It is super cool to lie in bed and stare at my "book" on the wall. IT'S INSPIRING.

Since I am the worst plotter ever and you are apparently the queen of plotting I was very very excited to read this. I actually got Scrivener yesterday so I could do the 30 day trial thing for NaNo, and it looks cool so far – I’m trying to kind of learn as I go, since I have no time (between NaNoing and school) to actually read the directions, but who needs instructions anyway?*

*I do. I am an instruction reader. This diving-in-without-doing-the-Scrivener-tutorial is against my basic instinct. I never jump into anything unprepared. GAH NaNo is making me do weird things!

However, this NaNo is going quite well, and I am quite ahead already and am not floundering yet. Good signs. I hope it continues thus. I’m not exactly happy with the WORDS I’ve written, but my plot is decent so I’m forcing myself to keep going. (Miracle of miracles my plot is working! I don’t want to jinx it.)

I’m still trying to figure out my ideal plotting method, but right now it involves a lot of scribbles on a lot of papers with a lot of confusing arrows. Also post its.

AFJDKASLD THAT JUST MAKES MY EYEBALLS FLAIL THAT YOU’VE BEEN WAITING. HAHAH. *smushes cake of appreciation in your hair* Omg, how do you like Scrivener?! I got it like maybe 10 days before NaNo? So I had a bit of a chacne to figure out things. XD Apparently there’s a super intense tutorial video to watch, but bah. Who has time for that? I watched a 10 minute tutorial on the basics and just kept clicking things. 😛 I’m going to do a Scrivner post soon! Not a tutorial just a things you should know about how cool it is. BECAUSE I AM IN LOVE. *Ahem*

I’m never happy with my first draft words. 😛 I only start to get happy after 2nd drafts. XD And I’m okay with that process!!

Japanese culture AND dragons?! This book keeps getting better and better! Also, children’s books are the best for research. They are straight to the point and more interesting. Plus. pictures. Pictures are so underestimated. And yeah, ideas from things that turn into nothing like the original inspiration happens to me all the time. I look back and think, “What happened to you? You used to be a cute, little toddler of an idea and now you’re a monstrous adolescent who eats everything?! Someone help me.”

“You can sleep when you’re dead.”– Who needs sleep? Writing ideas wait for no sleeper! So much truth.

I’m kind of a mixture of a pantser and a plotter. I usually pants through most things. But if my idea is on hold, I tend to plot/mental write. But usually my plotting consists of random, diabolical scenes, a load of world-building, eh. . . and scattered tidbits of hilarious/devastating (or so I deluded myself) dialogue that I have no idea where to place in the novel.

SHERLOCK IS JUST EVERYTHING. I RELATE TO HIM QUITE A BIT THO, BUT SHHHH. XD

And I know right?! Not a single death! My CP was so shocked she actually asked if I was feeling okay. -_-

Pictures are basically everything when it comes to research. My life for pictures. ALTHOUGH the kids books never seem to dive in very deep. Like “Japanese people have summer and winter!” um. very helpful. How about giving me a ball park of the temperatures?!?! >_<

This is really helpful for me, Cait! The more exposure I get to the publishing industry and the more I interact with authors and aspiring writers, the more I want to become a writer/author myself. I’m starting to study writing in books more, and frankly I’l stuck on how to start. So thanks so much for sharing your plotting process! Rock on, my dear <3

LOVED reading this! I love how you said you get your ideas from everywhere! That happens to me too! I’ll watch something and then get a random idea from it that in no way relates to what I just watched. I also find my best novel thinking happens when I’m showering and driving at night.
~Sara

I love this post! Adore it, actually. 🙂 (I was literally singing Let it Go, FYI) I always love hearing about how plotters work, because I am totally a panster. Oops? Currently I’m not a huge writer, so that may be why, but I definitely want to be more serious about it soon.

Thanks for this! I read your I-Finished-Nano-in-Four-Days post, and by the end of it, I was curious who you planned out a novel well enough (or at all) to crank out 50,000+ words in four days.

I really like this approach and perhaps I’ll take a stab at it. I’m definitely not a pantser– I don’t like going in to projects blind at all. But, all other outlining approaches, with their grids and worksheets, seem so limiting. I especially love the idea of writing down a list of everything you like at the moment and figuring out how they are all related AND reading all the books that have already been written about the subject you want to write about. I’m curious though, how do you manage to keep your writing free from the influence of the books that you’ve just read?

Ooh, thanks for reading this post too, Jackie!! 😀 *flails* But that is an excellent question….omg, let me see. WELL. I’ve been writing for a while and I definitely can see my earlier projects are heavily influenced by what I read/saw/watched more. Now? I let things inspire me and influence me, but I make sure to keep it ME. Because there’s nothing really new, right? So I wanted dragons (they’ve been done a million times) and murder mysteries (there are a zillion of those) and the combining them with my own style and flair and a roadtrip vibe and things…I just hope it feels distinctly ME at the end. hehe. But I do let other books influence me! Like reading Seraphina ALWAYS made me want to write shape-shifting dragons. But I made mine modern instead of medieval. If that makes sense.

Aaaanyway, I’m completely rambling. I CAN RAMBLE FOR HOURS ABOUT WRITING. XD

“Sometimes I pet that novel and smile at it fondly. But mostly I toss it on the metaphorical bonfire and burn it with the fire of a thousand disappointed suns and then scream like I’ve been impaled by a pineapple frond.”

I LOVE YOU SO FREAKING MUCH.

this is really good advice I do the same thing with pinterest and faces gah and I WRITE JOKES TO MYSELF AND LITERALLY NOBODY BUT ME AND MAYBE MY SISTER UNDERSTAND THEM AND YES IT’S JUST FOR AWESOME IMMORTALS. *high fives*

I’m a panster, but I LOVE writing down remote details of the world that I’m writing THAT WILL NOT AFFECT THE STORY AT ALL. It’s bad. I write synopsis, do character plots with lots of details, but I DON’T PLOT THE STORY. It’s really bad, because I’ll get half way through, and get stuck, OR I’ll write, and I won’t get stuck, but because I don’t have a set plot, the story will change so much that when I go to edit, it’s like 50 hurricanes went through the story and messed all the words up.
Everybody I know who writes uses Pintrest for their story boards…….and then there’s me, who makes story boards with music…..

Ahhhh, plotting IS a challenge, isn’t it?!? 😂 I used to be a panster!! It definitely didn’t work out for me and I used to get stuck a lot, bleh. I really hate writers block, and I find plotting in a lot of detail helps avoid that? WHICH IS AWESOME. 😂 But whatever works best for us right?! So don’t feel pressured to plot if you don’t like to!

I lthink I’m in between a panster and a plotter, but more so a plotter, because it seems like every other year I’ve been doing NaNo, I’ve flip flopped. (guess what I’m doing for Camp NaNo ha) I’m learning that in order for not to get stuck and not write ofr days is to write out scenes out of order. I love character driven novels and that’s what I focus on in my novels becuase I love seeing how far a character has come. 🙂

Character driven novels are my everything too!! Which makes me annoyed at myself for not being able to invent characters very well. 😂 Hehe, but yay for being both panster and plotter! Best of both worlds, right?!? (Good luck with Camp!!)